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Thermoelectric Enhancement in Single Organic Radical Molecules.

Juan Hurtado-GallegoSara SangtarashRoss DavidsonLaura Rincón-GarcíaAbdalghani DaaoubGabino Rubio-BollingerColin J LambertVasily S OganesyanMartin R BryceNicolas AgraitHatef Sadeghi
Published in: Nano letters (2022)
Organic thermoelectric materials have potential for wearable heating, cooling, and energy generation devices at room temperature. For this to be technologically viable, high-conductance ( G ) and high-Seebeck-coefficient ( S ) materials are needed. For most semiconductors, the increase in S is accompanied by a decrease in G . Here, using a combined experimental and theoretical investigation, we demonstrate that a simultaneous enhancement of S and G can be achieved in single organic radical molecules, thanks to their intrinsic spin state. A counterintuitive quantum interference (QI) effect is also observed in stable Blatter radical molecules, where constructive QI occurs for a meta -connected radical, leading to further enhancement of thermoelectric properties. Compared to an analogous closed-shell molecule, the power factor is enhanced by more than 1 order of magnitude in radicals. These results open a new avenue for the development of organic thermoelectric materials operating at room temperature.
Keyphrases
  • room temperature
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  • water soluble
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